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29Nov

Ground-breaking NZ health technology set to improve health for all

29 November 2018 By Conporto Admin

A ground-breaking New Zealand service that detects and prevents serious medication and treatment-related harm in real time has been approved for roll out across the health sector.

Conporto Event Detection and Mitigation (Conporto EDM)is a new software solution that detects and notifies clinicians of serious harm events and solves one of the health profession’s biggest issues – access to a patient’s full medical history when making treatment decisions.

The service has been developed by Conporto Health, the commercial arm of Patients First - a health IT not-for-profit owned by the Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners and General Practice New Zealand.

Conporto Health chief executive Helmut Modlik said the technology is a world first and would be a game changer for the health sector.

“Currently three out of 10 patients admitted to New Zealand hospitals are harmed by medications given to them because medical professionals are having to make treatment decisions without a full picture of what is going on for a patient – both in terms of their medical history, and other vital information that can affect treatment decisions.

“We know the Conporto EDM service can significantly reduce this statistic, improving health for all New Zealanders, especiallyMāori and Pacific people, and reduce the overall burden on the health system.”

The Conporto EDM system works by using secure software installed on computers of hospitals, medical practices, pharmacies and other health care providers to effectively ‘join the dots’ between a person and their various interactions with the health sector.

“A notification is triggered by an appointment,prescription, an emergency department admission or other kind of health encounter,” Mr Modlik said.

“Conporto EDM automatically analyses all the information from these different locations in real time and identifies if thereis risk of harm occurring. A notification is then sent to the relevant medical professional outlining the potential harm to the patient they are seeing.”

Notifications are delivered by a secure email system –hMael – specifically developed by Patients First to deliver confidential patient information.

Mr Modlik said getting the okay from the Ministry of Health to go to market was a key step in deploying the service nationwide.

“We’ve just been through a very thorough ‘proof of concept’ trial where Conporto EDM has been used by a significant number o fhealth providers over several months.

“This allowed us to refine the service in real world situations and provide evidence of its effectiveness in detecting potential harm events, alerting medical professionals in ways that work for them, and improving health outcomes for affected patients.

Mr Modlik said the proof of concept had also confirmed for the Ministry of Health that there should be a requirement for harm event detection being available in all general practice.

“Based on the success of the trial and the feedback we have received to date we are extremely confident we will have strong response from the sector to take up and use the service.

“The health system is a complex area so anything that makes it simpler for medical professionals to do their jobs and increase patient safety is a good thing.”